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Bow Island Review 


For the Districts of:- Pleasant View 
Seven Persons, Whitla, Winnifred, Bow Island, Burdett, Grassy Lake, Foremost and Maleb. — 


TENTH YEAR, BOW ISLAND, ALBERTA, FRIDAY MARCH 12. 1920. SUBSCRIPTION 1.50 A YEA) 


ee | Mx. W. Willard is ae assist- 
BOW ISLAND ing in U.K. Johnson’s Butcher 
March 13 1920 | From our awn Corresonten sop. Mr Willd ie al See Us for 


known in Calgary where he 


— monte and family were has been workir 
BLARTS THE GREAT SALE [item retor to nestew ion mes esa General Hardware 
y Remember the 26th. March 
Soc ae for the Auction Sale at C.W, 


—) < 


Mr. George Oliver of the Globe Hurds, Bow I 
8, sland. See hand- 
Remember that this is Your Storeieturned to business Inst Mott 


day after spending a few days con bills for list of Goods We have all your 
opportunity to qet your Summer valesing after his attack of flu at (he ~ 


C _ 
Beattie’s Garage will conduct |] - 
heme of Mr, M.H. Smith, at) Winni- 8 


‘ ° 
needs at the very Rock Bottom Price, fred — 6 hool on the Fordson Spring Needs 
™ actoron Friday and Satuar- . 


do Not miss this but Mi. ee Wace Tt was a business day March 26th and 27th. At 


visitor to Medicine Hat last sapien school every detail of the i MeN 
BUY-BU Y-BUY ————— |famous Fordson Tractor will be Churn S, Washing Machines 


Mr, Fortune, Mr. Reynar and Mr, | gone into by experts from the 


Stewart of Maleb were business visit-/factory a tractor will be torn 


ame nan tok ound anyway ESS Ks Sh Gag Mantles and Gas Fixture 


A very quiet wedding was solem-|material used in construction, 


‘ : one 7 hl . ‘ : 

¥ou Need nized at Calgary on Tuesday Mareh|ThisGarage extends a cordial 
e - » ha 4 ete t £ } . : 

Znd. when Emina Peterson daughter invitation to all to be present ! 

7 . Ie aS ' 4 de 

of Alex Peterson of Bow Island, be whether you own u Fordson or | 

“a 


® came 1e «bride of aul Ellis o 4 
Children’s and Ladies’ Hose are fi ee eee enoon |B! oy. Ostrum’s Hardware Store 
very special tup Mr. and Mrs, Ellis will be at home | NOTICE Main Street Bow Island 


to their fviends in Carbon, Alta, Beginning 15th, March [920 


Ladies’ Waists of the very latest style ee ee Haircuts will be Tic. as passed by the | — 


Mr. H, Healey bas taken a position} Lethbridge and Medicine Hat local 
unions of the J.B.J.W. of A. 
S H.J. Grigsby 


Leonard Ferne, ~ Cothier The many friends of Mrs. Dixson 


| ill be pleased to hear she has so far 


We have just unloaded a ear | 


A 
~ .|O otutoes, ¢ t see us for | 
recovered from her recent attack of rp ‘toes, call and see us for | 


BOW ISLAND 


prices 


pie fluas to beable to be out for a 


| 
short drive on Monday. Bateman Bros. - Bow Island. | 


a —— | noone: “Eneeee | 
| Mey Almond Gragg was a visiter| Mi. Nels Huckenson went to Med- | 
THE DOW ISLAN COD eet To des ——— eye, icine Matto the hospital on Wediwsday | 

‘ - t romadey j 
—_—— ! 


CASH MEAT MARKET US SPC mE oon Smo Rela al 


sinese ; 
a 1S1NCS88 | business visitor in town this week 
| Visitor to town last Friday, he thinks 


that the prospects for a Crop are good Beatties Garage state their Oil Sale i 
Highest Prices Paid for Hides he has every faith in this country|has been very successful, this Sale | Rumely 12x20 
se aE SEM os AP . having done exceedingly well himself | closed Thursday of this week. 


the last five years in spite of the dry ° 


L 7 ‘ | aah Mr. Chester Prendegast } pe t| This is the Tractor you Know you 
A weather of the last three years eRe Sen eaeapen 
SPECI | Pay the winter up North has returned ash can Depend Upon 


look after his farm for the coming 
g 


; oer Jack and John McPhail aT as these are liable to be Scarce 
who had been spending a few weeks einnaetaeeaate | 
We have the at the home ot Mr ana Mrs, J. Ross The British Government ane | You should Order at Once 


CHOICEST of BEEF "°°" cera tanec Come in and talk it over 


Mrs, Downing’s friends will be gind 


to hear that she is improving Mr. John Hackett who spent | SWENNUMSON & CO. 
e e ety 752 winter at Manyberries has rveturned|®& MAIN STREET BOW ISLAND | 
The Price is Right to his farm ena Sa NRE 


Mr. Ludtke was a visitor last week 


to Wetaskiwin and the Northern 


appending ie yee QUAND 5 Teeter s mekel DAMES | 


| 9 e 
RT RE crict No, 94 A big Dance will be held | Now S$ the Time 
Soe on Wednesday March the 17th | 
ed E JOH NSON PROPRIETOR Mr, C, Morey and triends were vis a, rh pe of the! to KILL 


itors to Medicine Hat last week for althe Oddfellows 


few. seve 1.0,0,F. Hall Bow Island | ; The Gophers 
Good Orchestra Music | 
A. E. BROWNING | 


Baker and Confectioner Prices of Paper, Ink, Type and 
MAIN STREET --- BOW ISLAND. 
pete Express Rates 


One Killed now is as good as 


Ae eS Oe : 


fifty later on 


We have all kinds of 
GOPHER POISON 


All New Stock of 
FORMALDEHYDE 


Fresh Bread and Buns Daily 


‘ in Have all Advanced, Making a Total of 
Neilson’s Chocolates: 7 , g 


over 100 per cent Increase, in this last 


Pipes and Tobacco. year alone, to the Cost of producing 


Agents for 
“FIVE ROSES FLOUR” 


this Paper, 


The Bow Island Drug and 
Stationery Co, Ltd. 


All Advertisements, or Changes of Advertisements, Notices, or Reading Matter should be in the 
Review Office by Monday or at the latest Tuesday morning to appear the same week, as the 
Review is printed every Thursday 


Your Subscription is it Due ? 


George Lomas, Agent for OUR BREAD at Burdett We Will be Glad to Receive It. 


i 
ac a 


France Objects to 
Any Modification 
Of Peace Terms 


o- 


ee The French government | Sweden Votes to Join 


will make determined opposition to 
any revision of the of Versailles 
that would modify her claim on Ger- 


aty 
many, it is learned here. 
| 


trea 


The attitude of the French govern Liberal and Socialist Speakers Joined 
ment, according to the offic ial point With Premier in Favoring 
of view, is in perfect accord with the Action : 
sentiments of the new chamber of} Stoc kholm.—By a vote of 152 to 67} 
Geputics. It is held that any further |the lower house of the Diet voted in! 
concessions by the French govern-|favor of Swedish participation in the 
ment to‘ Germany would not be tol-|League of Nations. 
erated by parliament, and if made the The vote followed a strong argt-| 
government would be overthrown, ment for the proposition by Premier 
The French official view of the | Ed den. He was supported by Liberal 
economic situation, it was said in jand Socialist speakers, who declared 


authoritative circles, is quite the same |the League marked a great advance 


as that sect forth in London, that is, towards an effective system of inter- 
" Pie 

all Europe must be put on a pros- jnations 1 law. 

perous basis. The French, however, | The upper chamber deferred its dis- 


it was pointed out, are beginning to | cussion of the question of Sweden's 
think their allies have forgotten that ;membership in the League, 
France herself is not on a prosper- | heriitittadniagyeotemciainis 
ous basis, and notin a ae ion to} T h R P | d 
} 
make concessions that would gud yp us aging in 1a 
her own economic interes to any-| | 
one, least of all to Germar | Thousands of Canes Ave Being Taken |: 


| Into Country By Released 
1. Prisoners 
Against Sal ie he New York—Poland is\ confronted | 


| with the 


history of the world, the American 


The West Indies| 
\lief ad 
Suggestion of Viscount Rothermere | Col 
Evokes Little Comment in 
Great Britain 
London.—The 
the British West 


re 

ninistration was informed by | 
Gilchrist, head of the American 
janti-typhus expedition in Europe. The 
lcable says thousands of cases are be- 

to sell/ing imported into Poland from the 
¢ United | Ukraine 


propositior 


Indies to th and the east by ge 


States to help balance Great Britain’s | released prisoners of war from 

war debt has evoked little comme .|sia Bolsheviki armies are tes g 
The proposal is not supported in any | ther elves of typhus cases by ship-} 
responsible quarter, and unless the at | Ping them to the Polish border. 
titude of Premier Lloy orge has| There is a high death rate among 
changed recently, is certain to be un |the doctors treating the stricken. 


favorably received by the government ce 


Viscount Rothermere, brother of} 
Lord Northcliffe, a few months ago | Russia Wants to Trade 
made such a suggestion in a news-} 
paper article It is reported that | Has Huge Sides « ot Book to Offer 
Premier Lloyd George to the World 


denounced the | 
London,—According 
{Times dispatch from Abo, Finland, 
| Gukowskij chief of 
° ° trade delegation, told the press repre- | 
More Interest in Farming | sentatives that Russia chiefly desired | 
j commercial relations with England, 
Big Demand for Farm Literature in} |the United States, Norway, and Swe- 
Two Tongues iden 
Ottawa—A veritable flood of ap- | mous stores of flour, wool, leather, 
plications for farm literature is re-|flax, hemp and skins wud desired the 
ported from the offices of the Com- 
mission of Conservation Recently 


vehement is to his 


proposition in 
intimates. 


tert 


the Bolsheviki | 


ing the means of transportation from 


the department printed a third edition | Russia, 

of 15,000 account books given free to} a 

farmers, and before the issue was off | U.S. Won't Take Part 

the press every copy had been applied} London.—There has been no inten- 


for. An issue published in French 
was similarly taken up, Department 
Officials declare it to be a sudden 
wave of recognition on the part of }ment here 

farmers that business and scientific] The British Admiralty states there 
principles are essential to the suc- [is no confirmation of the report that 
cess of modern farm life. {the British intend to send more ships 
to the Dardanelles, 


tion, and there is none now, of Amer- 
jican naval participation in the Dar- 
danelles, according to an announce- 


Soviets Approach Japan 
London.—A wireless dispatch from | Shantung Bestreiinn is nye adopted 
Moscow says that the Irkutsk repre- Washington.—The Shantung reser- 
sentative of the Soviet commissiarat | vation to the peace treaty as modi- 
. . . | : . «7 . 
of forcign affairs has been instructed |fied in the bi-partisan compromise 
to hand the Bolshevik peace proposals|conference, was re-adopted by the 
to the Japanese there,|senate. ‘The vote was 48 to 21, as 
and agree with the Japanese govern-|compared to a vote of 33 to 41 when 
ment on the time and place for hold-|the reservation first was adopted in 
ing negotiations, November, 


headquarters 


More Proposals 
For Settlement 
Of Irish Question 


Montreal.—The Montreal Star pub- 
Hshes the following from a staff cor- 
respondent in Dublin: 

“While Ulster is anxiously waiting 
the arrival of Sir Edward Carson to 
decide its policy regarding the latest 
Home Rule Bill, the remainder of Ire- 
land is holding back to hear the pro- 
posals of Sir Horace Plunkett, who 
has lately returned from the United 
States. 

“Sir Horace, since his arrival in 
London, has maintained absolute si- 
lence, but it is announced that the 
alternative demand to the present 


the central constituent assembly by a 
proportional representation vote. 
Then the committee of the League of 
Nations would examine the claims of 
all parties to co-operate with the as- 
sembly in the formulation of a poli- 
tical constitution, 

“T understand that Sir Horace has 
the firm promise of the United States 
to withdraw the reservations te the 
covenant of the League of Nations, 
which affects Dominion votes in the 
League of Nations, and also to assent 
to enter the League of Nations, ff 
Ireland is granted representation of 


League of Nations, 


and} 


THE belt i 


Gives Himself Up 
After Six Years 


Weary of Globe Trotting, Winnipeg/j. 1. itnigtns Declares They 


Man Surrenders on Man- 
slaughter Charge 


Ottawa. — Conscience stricken and] packers were charged in testimony 
weary of his Avanderings all over the} given before 
face of the globe, Henry William Elk-|committee by J, H. Montgomery, of 
Winnipeg on a Basin, 
charge of manslaughter, walked int®]} stock prices reduced and driven grow 
surrendered fers out of business, 


horn, wanted at 
the police 
himself, 

The crime 


station and 


with 


{friend named George Graff. While 


jjured in the head, Realizing his 


the injured man comfortable by the 


jhorn, changing 
|James Ford, hearing a warrant was 
jout for his arrest. tried to enlist, but 
| was rejected as medically unfit. He 
Hater secured a job as a stoker on an 
'ocean-going ship, and in it quartered 
}the globe, Tired of his seafaring life, 
he returned to Canada, made his way 
to Toronto, where he was recognized 
and narrowly escaped capture. From 
jthere he went to Hamilton, and wary 
again in danger of arrest. Finally, 
a few days ago, after staking himself | 
jto meagre living by spasmodic em- 
ployment, he came to Ottawa, and 


worst typhus epidemic in the | finding himself unable to get work of ;|to Turkey at Paris on March 2 


| 
jany kind, he acted upon a letter he 


|received from his mother advising him 
|to surrender to the authorities. 
Elkhorn will be held in jail, pend- 
jing receipt of information from the 
| Winnipeg authorities. 


} ne 


-« Transport Strike Threatened 


Food Supply May Be Affected By a 
Walkout 

London.—Great Britain is threaten- 
|ed with a nation-wide strike of high- 
l way transportation workers involving 
|from 150,000 to 170,000 men, ¢c 
| movement would serioush» affect the 
|distribution of food. The headquar- 
ters of federation of | 


| 


the national 


to a London |traysportation workers has authorized | oened its fourteenth annual meeting 
M. |the local executives to hand in strike |at Osgoode Hall. 


{notices because of the employers’ re- 
| fui al of men’s demands for an in- 
crease in pay of 10 shillings per 
week, A conference held at the min- 
istry of labor, in an effort to compose 


it is still hoped that at the last min- | 
ute newly-inaugurated negotiations | 


nations in trade to assist in improy-]Will enable a settlement to be brought | 


about. The railways, the tram car 
lines, and the bus services would not 
be affected. 


Classiffication Ruling 


Appeal of U.G.G. on Road Graders 
Is Turned Down 
Ottawa.—The board of railway 
commissioners has ruled that a re- 
duction of the classification of road 
graders below the present rating of 
one and one-half times first class is 

not justified. 

The United Grain Growers applied 
to the board for reduction of classi- 
fication to the first class, with mini- 
mum of 5,000 pounds on flat cars. 

The railway commission grants ap- 
plication of the freight adjusting bu- 
reau of Vancouver B.C., for the ap- 
plication of $2.65 rate on shoddy 
blankets, bringing them under item 
250 of Canadian freight association 
tariff No, 1A, 


Destroy Turk Navy 


Turkish Warships Will Be Broken Up 
According to Pact 

London.—The disposition of the 
Turkish navy was definitely settled by 
the allied supreme council when it 
decided that the peace treaty should 
provide that the warships be broken 
up. The Turkish army will be reduc- 
ed to such a point by the peace terms 
that it would not be effective against 
another country. 

The council deliberated over the 
report of Marshal Foch on the mili- 
tary situation as regards Turkey, but 
it did not determine on the question 
of details of the military terms of the 
treaty. 


Phoned From Winnipeg to Montreal 
_ Winnipeg, — ‘The first commercial 
call on the telephone from this city 
to Montreal was made by H. M, Mc- 


which Elkhorn jas just an ordinary stock grower. 
harges himself is that on one night}/deplored injunctions and “immunity 
jin June, 1914, he stole an automobile | baths” 

jin which he went ipy- -tiding with a} packers. 


travelling at a fast clip the automo-/he said. 
bile upset and Graff was badly in-/pother 


friend was in extremis, and fearful for | packing 
the results of his escapade, he made}through a de-lousing station.” 


roadside and then fled from Winnipeg. |ers with 
Graff died a few days later, and Elk-jgrowers and prevent their protesting 
his name to Arthur against legislation for their control. 


‘Turks to Receive 


| Has Now Been Practically Completed 


jand uniform system of divorce laws, 
He added that Russia had enor-j the difficulties, proved abortive, but) but it is high time that Canada began 


BOW ISLAND, ALBERTA 


—— 


Charges Against Five 
Meat Packers i in U. S. 


ane oe a a a 


Turkey Loses 
Nearly All Her 
European Domain 
‘a High Prices At The | we 


Montgomery described himself 
en ordinary te e| Brandon Swine Auction 


Lowered Livestock Prices 
Washington, — The big five meat 
the house agriculture 


Wyoming, with having 


London, Turkey is stripped of 
practically all her territory in Europe, 
but retains the sacred places, by the 
treaty now being completed by the 
conference of forcign ministers and 
Average Was $08.80, 40, and Total Real-|ay;bassadors, it became known here, 

ized Was $2,925 Thrace has been awarded to Greece 

Brandon.—Good prices prevailed at) iby the peace conference, buf the pre 
An average of $96.50 | sent conference is charged with the 
task of working out plans whereby 
the Turks will keep control of tlie sa. 


Mr. 


in proceedings against the 
The packers thrive on injunctions, | 
“An injunction does 
them any more than 
powder does a cootic. The 


should 


not 
insect 
whole 
put 


the swine sale. 
lwas paid for each hog. 
' In all there were 21 animals offered | 
for sale, and $2,025 was realized. This cred places, and Adrianople e and 
considered to be ‘a splendid figure. Smyrna will be placed und Greek 
The highest price for any one animal |control. : ; 
lis $200 for Mastocton Lady, a Poland | London. Replying to a question in 
Ic hina. ithe House of Commons regarding the 
There was also paid $180 for an- ot A Premier 
lother Poland China. The top price} |Lloyd George said! this had been the 
obtained for a Yorkshire was $122.50. | subject of very serious consideration 
I he best price obtained for a Berk-) at the allicd conference, and that the 
Treaty March 22 |: jconference reached® a. decision 
| The shebbit ate did not produce any | whic h had been communicated to their 
prices, The. buyers were not) representatives at Constantinople. It 
By the Supreme Council \bidding long prices on the offerings , | Would not be added the 
London.—The peace conference has |with the result that the Ipremiecr, to make public at the tnow 
closed its London sessions, ‘after pre-!not care to sacrifice their sheep. the character these medse 
paring the Turkish treaty and its ec What would be done regarding - 
onomic conclusions in such a manner |for 
that they may be completed by as- | 


sistants, The treaty will be oe Borden’s Health is Better 


be 


industry 


Mr. Montgomery charged the pack- ;i 


efforts to influence stock 


i massacres Armenians, 


had 


| good 
advisable, 
owners did 
{ment of 
The top price obtained for Oxfords ; "tes. 
it would depend upon advices from 
{the Turkish capital. “We are await- 
ting that advice now,” continued, 


a single animal was $45, 


it i“but I can assure you that we are 
Was announced, naa \fully alive to the gravity of the po- 
It was possible that Premier -Mil-|Foster Says Premier Will Be~Back sition, and the need of takifig very 


lerand will come to London the lat- 
ter part of this week to confer with | 


Inside of Two Months 


Ottawa.—Sir Foster 


|strong measures to protect minorities 


George an-|as far as can be done in a country 


the foreign ministers and ambassa-|nounced in the House of Commons of this kind. I hope to be able to 
dors on the Turkish treaty and on |that if the present rate of improve-|make a Statement in a yery short 
the contentions of the Hungarians re- {iment in the health of the Prime Min- time,’ but we are at the moment await- 
Jgarding their treaty. ister continued, Sir Robert Borden |ing the views of the representatives 
cxinghdnbikiokpao uli would be in the house again within |of all the allies at Constantinople of 

two months. It was Dr. Beland who |the suggestion which we put forward.” 


Urges Uniform Divorce Law 


com cre | Minister's 
Ontario Bar Association's President) “With 
Wants Federal House to the Prime 
Take Action 

Toronto.—Uniformity of Canadian 
laws of divorce was urged by Presi- 
dent N. B. Gash in his address to 
the Ontario Bar Association, which 


asked for information c 


as to the Prime 
and plans. 


to the health of Siege Warfare 
.” Sir George Fos Against Prohibition 


may that for the | 

Itwo months he has been away, the | —- 

ment in his health has been | Will Fight to a Finish in an Attempt 
rate of im- to Defeat the Measure 

as 1 hope it will, | Washington.—Sicge warfare against 


IT have no reason to fear that we may ithe Prohibition Enforcement Act was 


condition 
reference 
Minister 
ter replied, “I say 
improve 
marked; and if the same 


provement continues, 


He said: not expect to have him with us, I |inaugurated by “wet” members of the 

“The judicial systems of the civ-|think, within two months’ time.” jhouse, In the initial act they, were 

ilized countries throughout the seiko j beaten when an amendment w vas voted 
veeld are tog varied and gonflict’—~) , id wn, 254 to 86, but thes 

to permit any dream of tote maa ttower| Urges Preparedness i tlonists told “the house oe would 


ee lraise the issue on every bill that 
May Not Have Allies to Hold Lines comes up for appropriating funds to 
Next Time 


to put her house in order for this 
purpose, Parliament should bring 
down a géneral law superseding all 
the preceding laws on the subject, 
and conferring to courts constituted 
for the purpose, the disposition of 
such cases. Only in this way shall 
we put an end for all time to the un- 


enforce the prohibition amendment. 
Washington.—Urging forcsight on} While the “wets” in the house were 

the preparedness question, General | making their attack the attorney- 

Pershing declared the country should|general of the state of New Jersey 

keep intact its machinery for manu-|filed suit in the supreme court to de- 

facture of war materials and vetatatngs aieeh the prohibition amendment un- 

mnilitary cantonments, constitutional and to prevent federal 
“We might not have the 


allies to|officials from enforcing it, 


certainty, confusion and conflict of |hold the lines for us next time,” Per-| New Jersey action contends that 
laws that have been cropping up and|shing ¢aid, in an interview following|the amendment was not properly 
are bound to increase as time goes |his return from a tour of inspection|drawn and that congress possesses 


by.” of the country’s military resources. 

Pershing said he found much senti- 
ment for universal military 
during his trips. He refused 
politics, 


no power to propose a constitutional 
amendment regulating the. habits and 
training |the morals 6f the people, 

to talk ; 


| een 


Favors Expulsion of Turks 
Washington.—Under a _ resolution 
introduced by Senator King, Demo-* 


erat, Utah, the senate would declare 
Kentville, N.S.—The executive of|in favor of the expulsion of the gov- 


the Nova Scotia Farmers’ Association|ernment of the Ottoman Turks from 
met here, and after hearing reports|Constantinople, and the erection of 
from different sections of the pro-|three independent states in the old 
vince, it was decided to call a conyen-|Turkish empire, under the direction 


tion early in April for the purpose of|of the allied powers or the League of 
organizing along political lines, Nations, 


Want to Run Own School 


Mennonites Would Do So In Accord- 
ance With Manitoba Public 
School Act 

Winnipeg. — Requesting that the 
trusteeship of one of the Mennonite 
schools be returned to them, and stat- 
ing that it was their intention and 
desire to conduct the school, if given 
control, in accordance with the. Man- 
itoba Public School Act, a delegation, 
composed of four Mennonites, waited 


upon the provincial government, The Bela Kun to Get Liberty Dozen New Elevators 
school for which they ask the trus- 


Paris.—Bela Kun, former commun-| Calgary.—Construction of a dozen 
teeship had been run as a private|list dictator of Hungary, will be set|new elevators in Alberta is included 
school, and was taken over by theJat liberty in Vienna, according to alin the 1920 program-of the United 
government in 1918 to ensure compli-|dispatch to the Havas Agency from|Grain Growers, according to a state- 
ance with the act, and it has since|the Austrian capital, ment made here, 
been operating in a satisfactory way, 


Nova Scotia Farmers to Organize for | 
Politics 


Judge Robson 
Gives Views On 


Commerce Board 


Ottawa.—Sir George Foster tabledjact in an advisory capacity to pro- 
in the house the correspondence be-|vincial boards, would be more useful 
tween himself and Judge Robson, cov-|than the board as constituted at pre- 
ering the latter's resignation as chair-|sent, the matter of dealing with pro- 
man of the Board of Commerce, |fiteers being better left, the judge 
Judge Robson states simply that he|thinks, to the provincial authorities. 
finds it impossible to remove his| He etated that the act actually 


More Murders in Ireland 

Dublin.—The killing of three per- 
sons in various parts of Ireland have 
been reported in a period of 24 hours. 
Captain Shaw Taylor, a landowner, 
was shot dead at Athenry, County 
Galway; an unknown man died as the 
result of wounds received in Dublin, 
and Roger Marsh was killed at Cork 
by a party of armed men, 


Millionaire Charged With Conspiracy 
Chicago, — William Bross Lloyd, 
millionaire sergeant-at-arms of the 
Communist Labor party, and fifteen 
other Communists must stand trial on 
indictments recently returned charg- 
ing them with conspiracy to over- 
throw the government by force, 
Judge Oscar Hebele denied a mo- 


bill will be presented to a great re- 
resentative meeting to be held in 
Dublin, 

“On! the highest authority, I am 
able to forecast that Sir Horace 
Plunkett's policy would bring Ireland 
into a whirlpool of international af- 
faire. First, it includes the previous 
demand for full Dominion status, 
claiming the ht of the various 
countries to de their relations to 


a Dominion status, 


“It is also stated that the United 
States would undertake to consider 
adjustment of the exchange situation 
if Ireland's problem is settled on the 
Dominion basis, 

“Meanwhile every effort is being 
made here to bring together all the 


parties to egies to Plunkett's pro-] Necessity is mot only the mother 
effort is not withoutjof invention, but the divorced wife of 


posal and this 
success. 


home to Ottawa, and his presence is 
required in Winnipeg. The acting 
premier in his acknowledgement ac- 
cepts Judge Robson's resignation with 
regret, 

On the same day as he resigned, 
February 23, Judge Robson wrote a 
long letter to the acting premier, glv- 
ing his views on the operation of the 
Board of Commerce, suggesting that 
a federal machine to inquire into costs 
val oun of commodities, and to 


- 


Farlane, who spoke to his gon at the 
Mount Royal club, as well as two 
other Montreal persons, The voices) 
were distinct, though in the ordinary 
tone, and connections were made via 
New York, Chicago and Minneapolis 
without relay. 


tion to quash the indictments, 


Lord French's Mail Seized 
Dublin,—A mail van containing let- 
ters of Viscount French, Lord Lieu- 
tenant of Ireland, and government 
officials, was held up by armed men, 
who carried off the mail. _ 


on 
W. N. U. 1306, 


plenty, 


be ad 


removes the last chance the consumer 
had to do anything for himself in re- 
ducing the cost of living, and was also 
designed to stand off co-operative 
movements which were likely to make 
progress for the benefit of the con- 
sumers, 

His experience “on the board, he 
declared, led him to the views which 
make it improper for him, to continuo 


on it, and he further stated that he — 


is out of sympathy with the atte 


i 
\ 


wv 


§ Pe: 


+ aihrg® 


PO 0 MALY 6 68 gE ee oe 
bas ba, ha pies te ea, . 


voir owned by a coperative irviga- 
tiop company at Hemet, Riverside 
County, Onlifornia. Less than two 
inches of rain had fallen in the val- 
ley in the eleven months previous, and 
asa result the reservoir was nearly 
dry. Day after day clouds had form- 
ed overhead, only later to drift awa 
without releasing their moisture 
days after Mr. Hatfleld began opera. 
tions, however there was a rain that 
vielded 1.04 inches, He continued his 
demonstrations for several days more 
and when he removed his towers the 
precipitation totalled 11,79 inches, In 
the meantime the water in the reser- 
voir rose twenty-two feet, His Uon- 
tiact was much more than filled. 

His greatest success, measured by 
inches of rainfall, was at San Deigo 
in January 1916, The citygand much 
of the surrounding farm land depended 
upon & great Morena reservoir for 
water. and due to a_ prolonged 
drought, this reservoir was nearly 
empty. In fact it had never contained 
more than a third of its capacity since 
it was built many years before the 
contract was made with Mr. Hatfteld 
to fill the artificial lake to overfllow- 
ing within a year. The amount offer; 
ed for accomplishing the feat was 
$10.000, and was to be paid by the 
city, through the city council, since 
the reservoir has a capacity of about 
eighteon billion gallons, the undertak- 
ing vaturally looked big, But Mr. 
Hatfield got busy with his parapher- 
nalia, and within a few days it had 
begun to rain, 

The start was somewhat mild, but 
it was not long until there began a 
veal downpour. Infact in a certain 
single day of twenty fours bours the 
fall of water reathed the terrible 
tota) of 16,18 inches. And in less than 
twenty seven days, or in less than 
one twelth of the time alloted for the 
work, the lake was filled to a point 
where the water rushed over the 
top of the high dam and formed a 
raging and ravaging river. In some 
parts of the district the precipitation 
ip these twenty-seven days was in 
excess of furty inches. Ip wasn't just 
a case of the country going wet 
where drought had prevailed 
months, but a genuine flood. 

“There is no magic in my method” 
says Mr. Hatfield “It is only scien- 
tific. The problem invelved in the 
preduction of rain by artificial means 
resolves itse!f into the matter of some- 
what localizing the ever present air- 
borne moisture and condensing it to 
the point of precipitation. To accom- 
plish this I use certain chemicals, the 
character of Which naturally must re- 
main my secret, 1 work fiom hard 
about thirty five feet high on which 
Ihave great evaporating tanks, the 
fumes of the chemicals by means of 
beat 1 use ave mixed with the sur- 
rounding air, which results in what 
you nay term an overturning of the 
clouds, cirreus clouds, the forerunners 
of rain clouds, in ashort time these 
cirrus clouds develop intoa nimbus, 
or rain cloud, Yes it is all very simple 
My system is notone of bombarding 


in order to reply in a general way 
fo the flood of inquiries at this office 
re ‘The Rainmaker” a farmer 
wishes to say that although he wrote 
to Mr, Hatfield with a view to secure- 
ing bis services he had as yet re- 
ceived no reply and as goon as be does 
it will be publishett in these colunme, 
Th the megnttme a number of men in 
the district have been quietly investi- 
gating tho watter and are thoroughly 
copvincet] of Hatfield’s ability to pro- 
duce rain. Inasmuch as the Dominion 
Government itself at one timeemploy- 
ed the man iv the Klondike regions 
and he fulfilled his contract to the 
satisfaction of the Government. who 
are we to claim, we would lose our 
faith io tie Christian religion if tha 
man actually doeg what he claims, 
Faith and we'll loose alot. more than 
thet if through pigheadedness we 
equashed an attempt to give dim atrial 
Following is an article that appeared 
§n Bveryhody's Magazine, written by 
av of@cial investigatar, Charles Alme 
Byers, ond the authenticity of this 
repart is above question: 7 

The Pacific Ooast insists upon call- 
ing Obarles Mallory Hatfield * rein- 
waker:* Mr, Hatfield says that they 
call him that, but he will net answer. 

1} do pet profess,” bd ctates, “ that 
I can actually make rain J only claim 
that I can induce Nature to release, 
hy way of precipitstion, tbe moisture 
which the air'already carries. In other 
worda, my work is purely @ matter of 
creating conditions that will attract 
\his stored-up moisture to a desired 
spot and there condense it to the point 
were it falleas rain, Therefore it may 
may be asid that I induce rain, but 
rot that § make it.” 

Mr. Hat@eld, who lives in Los 
Angeles, California Bas been steadily 
und solely engaged in persuading re- 
ealcitrent rain dpa to drop for more 
than fituep years, And he stayed 
awake fights thinking about what 

“the artifical production of 
auin” ‘nearly five years nefore he 
meade his first experiment, conducted 
on his father’s ranch in Sen Diego 
Ceanty, California, in April, 1902. 
Mis fivst experiment was followed 
iummeliately by a light precipitation 
—and there hadn't been rain previous- 
ly for several weeks. 

Other teste followed until he had bad 
fifteen successes and but a single 
fullure, 

Mr. Hatfield, todate, hay made 
snere than five hundred demonsira- 
tions of his system, and his d@is- 
appointments bave been very few 
ils centrects, in substance, always 
teagl, ‘‘No rain, ne pay; and tbey 
have been for amounts ranging from 
$58.08 to as bigh as 810,000. The terri- 
tory hea hescovered in his work ex-. 
tends from Sentral Texas to Dawson 
City in the Klondike, and during the 
fifteen ar more years he bas been thus 
engaged be has filled contracts for not 
only atackmen, grain-growers “and 
farmers but hydraulic miners reser- 
voip awnere and others, The rancher 
of the San Joaquin Valley California 
negotiated contracts for renewals for 
his services for eight consecutitive 
years; the farmers of eastern Oregon 
dij the eame for three years; and 
practically every time a draught bas 
seemed imminent iv southern Cali 
fornia some group of men bas been 
ready to Gpance the califor the man 
the PeciGco Coast persistingly call 
“the cain maker." 

1p the enmamer of 1800 Hatfield was 
colied to the Klondite. The placer 
miipere eroend Dewson City, in the 
Yukoa Velley, lacking water for the 
sigicing and washing of their gold 
besring gravel were unable to pro- 
ceed with the usual summer clean-up 


for 


luck. 
isn’t going to favor the same man 
five hundred times hand-running,” 


was a solicitor for sewing machines, 
Nearly every night, however, he spent 
delving into the mysteries of penum- 
bra and circus, airstrataandali the 
He 
states that the problem otf producing 
or inducing rein unnaturally first be. 
gan troubling his mind during Cali- 
fornia’» well remembered drought 
years of 1897 ta 1908, During those 
years there was hardly any rain at all 
in southern California, and gieat sut- 
fering resulted, Yet clouds and even 
foge were common, but for some 


queer habits of the realm above. 


withheld. The conditions set the 
youth to thinking, Wasn't it possible 


The answer, he says is yee, 
ae 


honus ef 910.080 if he could bring the Medicine Hat 


district e goed drought breaking rain 
The test began on June eleventh and 
continued to July twentieth, duriog 


Wholesome and Clean 
Clothes after you have sent 


them to this Laundry; ‘fons of 
3 ENED for 04.000 by Pure Water used, and so escape 
rapchers s04 business men, the Rain thedoadly Flu 
Fellew engaged the h reser- gorms, 
i ™ our ether Ad on Back Page 


the heavens, nor da | merely trust to for all you can make, you can | 
You ean understand that luck| Earn big Money 


In the ofd dog days young Hatfield! Also a Caligraph Typewriter 


reason the ever-hoped-for rains were] Sewing Machine Belts for sale 


to lend Nature just a little assistance ? The Review Office Bow Islan’ 


aa 
Bud 


Ae i | 
yay 


—— 


y . ’ ere 
SS ” 


———o 


The School will be in charge of Mr. McInnes of the Fordson] 
Factory, assisted by Mr. J.A. Blair of the Calgary Branch || 


ON’T FORGET THE DATES MARCH 26 and 27th. 


AT 
BEATTIE’'S GARAGE. 


Is Your Watch Keeping Time ? 


If not bring it to me and I will have it repaired for you 


You will need it during the Spring Work 


E.M. Johnston, Burdett 
Agent for R.A. Wright of Lethbridge 


| TO RUTH WORTHINGTON 
(OTHERWISE KNOWN AS 


Bargain Column ERWIS . 
23 ee RUTH HENDERSON 
{F YOU WANT TO! cake NOTICE that James G 


BUY OR SELL. | COPRNEERG Liquidater of the Canadian 


| Home Investment Company Limited 
anything jin Liquidation has commenced an 
; jaction against you in the Supreme 
See this Column Court of Alberta, Judicial Distriet of 
Advertisements taken Lethbridge for the sum of $568,22 
with interest thereon at’ the vate of 
for Goods to be per annum from the 25th, day of 

‘ . } Mareh, 1919 and foreclosure and 
placed in this Column ule of those certain lands described 
~} as Lots two (2), three (8), four (4), and 
FOR SALE lve (5) in Block Fourteen (14), Plan 
—__ - | 189) A.l, Purple Springs in mortgage 
Automatic Knitting. {yiven by James RK. Milligan to the 
7 {Canadian Home Investment Com 

Machine {pany Limited. 

Will make all your own| If you wish to file a defence hevein, 


mi may do so before the 22nd, day of 
Maveh, 1920, 
JOHNSTONE & RITOHTE, 


ly 
Hosiery, and there is a Demand | 


at home,! Plaintiff's Solicitors. 
‘ | Approved, J.A. Jackson, L.J.8,C, 
Reasonable price 
a 
=p 
The Bow Island Review | 


in splendid condition, 
Reasonable price 


MUSIC IN THE HOME | Bowlsland Review. 


Aditional 
Bow Island Locals 


A Home Phonograph for Sale, - 
Reasonable price 


A flne toned Estey Organ in good 
condition at a reasonable price 
See it at the Review Office 
Bow Island 


Mr. lyrwin of the Fairbanks Morse 


town this week. 
—_—_o——_——_————- 
Myr. Bob Mundell of Calgary 
business visitor in town this week 
—o-- 


Sewing Machine Oils, and 


All the above can be seen at 


Call or write 


PROWSE & LYONS 


—_—_—_—_——_—_—_—— 
Barristers, Solicitors Notaries Etc, 
J. B, Lyons J.H. Prowse 


in town last week 


ae 


The United Church. 


Bow Island every Friday ufternoon 
and Saturday morning 


Taber, Alta. : 
meets every Sunday at 


tverybody welcome 
If you need a loan on your pete vesy 


farm, see George Lomas of 
Burdett. 


Price $850 and American exchange 
F.0.B. Dearborn Mich. U.S.A. 


n friday and Saturday 26 and 2/th 
A FREE TRACTOR SCHOOL ON | 
FORDSON TRACT 


Sena. _ _— 


ORS 


Here is your chance to see allthe working 
parts of the world’s famous Fordson for Farmers} 


every District not yet represented, | 
2 } 


take Orders tor Printing work of every | 
description,and New Subscribers, and } 


helps to Boost your Business, 


so it is only fair to Boost the 


building and selling 


Lhe 
}und certainly proves the machine is 
Co, Calgary was # business visitor in | Properly made and is giving satisfac- 
lion, 
by Beatties Garage 
Saturday March 26th, and 27th, is 
| open to the public to show the won- 


was a 


| derful construction, Lhe quality of the 


J. H, Sandy, R.B, Olark, J.P, Bowe, | terial used and the ease of oper- 


Leo Bowe, R.F. Clark, John Doreher 


and several others from Burdett were 


eration of this machine, 
well as any 
asked to be present 


| that their time will be well repaid, 


The United Sunday Schoo! | 
lla.m, 


mane and tail, white on left hind toot 
Owner please call at N,B.6-11-12 
Grassy Lake and take same by paying 


J Elmer Still Supt 


tion must be cheap for Cash 


Address Car Rox 182 Bow Island 
——— + 


R.H. LAW. 
Hides and Furs Bought 


t z i = | Highest Prices Paid 


Call or have 
Mr 


shop. 


your Hides at 
Blacksmith 
Bow Island, 


Hutchinson's 


oO 

Bow Island School 
District No. 1883 
Applications will be 
[received up tu noon of Monday 
| March 22nd, for the position of 


| Janitor Officer. 


and Truant 

| Salary $75 per month 
Address Secretary 

Bow Island S.D. Bow Island 


oeedlesnesn ‘eee ee 
For Sale or Rent 
oo 
N. E 31-10-10 


quarcer 
Pion from Town of Bow Island 
| 


on 

for Sale Terms or for Rent 
Apply P.J. MeInerney 

Box 86 Bow Island Alta 


————9-—— 


LOANS 


When you want a Farin Loan, 
[ get it for you and get it quick 
Beattie. 


TEAMING. 


For General Draying and Cartage 
see John Martin 
| Bratton’s Livery Barn 
Bow Island 
| Piano Tuning 


BOW ISLAND 


} Organ and Piano Tuning, aleo repair 


—— jing. Teims reasonable, Work guar 
B J | d R . janteed satisfactory 
| Theo | ielson, Bo ; 
OW S an eview 1 Janie n tox jf 


Bow Island Alta. 


CHAS, AVERY, prop 
paeeeranenna — } 


} If you want to Buy. Sell or 
Publishing Office, Bow Island, Alta | exchange s 


anything you 
[tem Reporters and Correspondents : / ° ‘i &y 
wanted for the Bow Island Review’ in| possess, either large or small 


just have it putin our 


yours may sd is very District. Bs} “Bargain Column” 
unm to write in and see, if this inter- | 

ests you write now, | —o— 
\lso permanent Representative Sand | 

(gents wanted in every District to} WANTED 


A boy wanted whole or 


\dvertisements, Money can be made| part time 


easily in your spare time, Address | Apply Bow Island Review 
Box 182 Bow Island Alta, | 
Advertising Rates. | Impounded 
' iolices, 12e, per line first in} To whom it may concern 
perline each subsequent} Qn the N.W 3 Sec 10-10-12 
tn roiot i ; . 5 
Notices of Birtns, Matibares end| W. 4th Meridon the 25th day of 
Deaths will be charged for at the rate; February one roan, white faced 
pev. Insertion, ! 
iow b ad Sz ‘j i 
\nnouncements of entertainments |‘ sy randed | son right hip 
| ‘s 
{ onducted by churches, societies, | H.C, Slawson 
where admission is charged, at | Poundkeeper Burdett, Alta 
1 pries i ——— 
Classitied advts,, such as Wanted, GOVERNMENT 
For Sauls etce.,, 7c first insertion | 
jand $1-60e for three insertions. CLYDE STALLION, 
Caids of thanks $1.00, Local ads - - 
Jamong reading matter, 10c. per line | Parties wishing to breed mares to 
first insertion, 5c per line each follow- | the Clyesdule stalion purchased by 
TARE BR Oe |the Alberta Department of Agricul- 
No advertisement less than Té& pos Y : eatere Masterpleae’ 16007, 
\ll Advertisamantecaillliliberip- | abt rv the ong-we 1920, will make 
ions.innat be paid Sn Aaa | @PP ication toS G Carlyle, Live Stock 
Commissioner Departwent of 
Agriculture, Edmonton, giving name 
The latest available figure of theland registration number of mares. A 
United States show that Henry Ford | fe of $25 will be payable at time fo 


service anda further fee to be fixed 
by the Clydesdale Committee and the 
Live Stock Commissioner, will be 


ud son of Dearborn, Mich are now 


75% of ali the 


| tractors being built and sold in the payable when mare proves to be in 
United States. To be able to build | foal, 
and sell within the short period of 8) The location of the horse in the 


province will also be decided by this 
committee, and arrangments will be 
made that the service fees in every 
case Will cover freight soas to equal 
ize cost to parties residing in different 
parts of the province. Further partic- 
ulars will be published shortly, but 
parties desiring to breed maresshould 
make application at once, The stallion 
will likely be ready to begin the sea- 
son about May Ist, the Committee and 
Live Stock Commissioner reserve the 
right to revise the list of applications 
and make such rules and regulations 
astmay be deemed necessary regard. 
ing the seiyice of this stallien, 
8.G, CARLYLE 
Live Stock Commissioner 


yeur's fof all the tractors be sold in 


world is sure some record and 


The Tractor School being held 
Friday sand 


on 


Owners as 
interested persons are 
and are assured 


Estray | 
you, so you oughttosend your 
Printing Orders to the Bow 
Island Review. 

pasture bill and advertising, 


ts own ranks which it will take a] English language is antidisestablish-| 1, ’ op 
4 waar ; ' 1d purchase or was 
Stk aiveeali a mentarianism. It is a word n6t found fing had purch ased this heifer he 


“I started to use Cuticura Soap Ng 
and Ointment and I used two cakes | .4 — 
of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of 


g ti : « =e bat i 
if Canada is to grow great and]/in most American dictionaries, but is} offered $8,000 for the same animal 


All mothers can put away anxiety lan increase of $3,000 on his bargain, 


eee a 
mY id 
- , fe 
3 - oF 
ee 
Pl "This "Tat va . > hy Ty ENRTA a 
TIT REVIEW, BOW ISLAND, ALDEN esi 
_ ~~ _ — a eae - oe ee eae. ° tee pw a ee eae pcm 
people to be reasonable, and to be M r th Ic anada’s Work For Soldiers Prize Shorthorn co 4 
guided by reason and not impulse. ore am | aera 8 | Cattle Change Hands : a 
The danger against which Mr. : ; An army of soldiers trained thor . } 

RECHAM'S Pa yr e Sah 3 " 
|Crerar warns people to be on guard \Waaatiat ia 60 8. ago \, sughly in the arts of peace constitut Sale Held By the Western Canada ome | 
Be has found its Sreatest — ‘ay oan English chen: \ vart of Canada’s reconstruction pri o-| Shorthorn Breeders’ Club * 4 
most tragic expression in the ranks t ist be rte ae jeram, and she is now fitting 19 00) | at Brandon : } rem pe P j 
organized labor, where large facture BEECHAM 'S PILLS. } disabled soldiers for the duties of | One hundred and two Shorthorn For Three Years. Hard and H 
j ups of men showed a “a aaah coe — sd a petvitien life. Col, Hugh Clark, M. P.,| ttle brought a total of $51,985 at Awfully Sore, Disfigured, oY 
| Hn wake Reo doses former lead e of any medicin " ‘ ate havin 
| ness to d t tl pe she ‘Gold ‘ | parliamentary scoretary, says that! ie second annual sale held by the Coticura Heals, Z a. | ; 

» and their great i atior 7 y? fia j tne investment of $57,000,000 for the Western’ Canada Shorthorn Breeders’ } wg r e 
jcraft unions, and follow ultra-social- CS e er | fiscal yeat, which makes it possible ; Ra ae ne Ae 
| bea: re : S . , d ©) Club at Brandon, Mani ba, recently. “1 had been suffering with a pim 
is c, even anarcl sti¢, leaders ane Be ills to offer a seven months’ course 1") The average price for females was ply face for three years. My face . ‘ 

ir will-o’-the-wisp nostrum of the vocational training to these men, is @! yo g4g7 and $810 for bulls, ® The was full of pimples and they were} 
{One Big Union, Here West]  geig everwhere tn Canadas Enbores, 28c.,00¢ | national investment, since it encour-| ghe&t prited animatewas Lav vender har bee: pein Bh They fes- d 
| ani ’ me lose - igh a a " : } 
| anized labs r T. to}. . —_ . ages the disabled soldiers to become} l47th, soldsby John Barron, Carberry, and disfigured my hice, y, 

stroying itself. It largely alienated Ouch | producers, and restores their inde | Manitoba, to C. G. Beeching, of De caused me to lose a lot of si i 4 
support of all reasonable men and pes : ; pendence. During the training course} \\; 145 Alberta, . the price being andvwere awfully ny ee = ria . 
‘inen, and has created a division in] Probably the longest word in the] they receive from $60 to $150 month- €5 000 "K row Sve afte? Mr, Beech* scratch and irritate my face, .~ { : 4 


‘ ) ‘ 4 ie “ , : Cuticura Ointment when I was é 
‘sper there must be neither dis-]Sometimes used in Great Britain to}regarding their suffering children fr. Beedlilun, ciaiattdeciined MIE ecg ihe ete ) Clifford Yeomans, ye 
Tj et } f tly “class” nor “sectional” group-|tefer to the principles or poticy bial Pi ad a wee! a Nee. ce. nell eats did hot waut'tel Wt pit : 
may Warn og Re Lathi ini, Wttcaa eg thoae who are opposed tot lises-] Vorm Exterminator to give relief.; offer, stating that he did not want Use Cuticura for toilet ‘ 
eiy ihe 0 Peis Y es en tie ; a cabitahinedtt of al Churék oli a Its effects are sure and lasting, isell but intended showing the heifer) | purposes. Dithe wih Robt oot ‘ wow 
farning ¢ and Advice}. iia oe cAye vies aoe gs + land tet. 4 ‘i PRUNE ORE lat the Chciago Livestock show. Star with Ointment, dust with , 
I rry on educational oer ye with . Got Him Wrong }of “Hope, judged grand champion at} For free ELSE Bay aia nce fi 
, [2 view to cony ng the people as a eX ITP RTO, Swine fever had broken out in the; prandon and Saskatoon summer fairs, Pot Shine, c 
Hon. T bot that they are righ nd. whe . . 
b \.| whole that they are ight, a 4, wi n GET SLOAN’S FOR } village, and the local policeman h ad] as sold for $2,500 to M. L. Nelson, 4 
) ol % '- they suceeed in so convincing them, been appointed to call upon all own-| of ytidale, Sask 
' leader of i ir views wil 1d concrete expres- ers of d tal ti t|" RA ORINRBTAR As hae ; f 
na Nae . py ek will fin i ia B ee OUR PAIN RELIEF s of pigs and take particulars of! There was a great rivalry between 7 
eu ae , pee ce she re ene ‘ dl * aa pe aie ‘aaa f ¥ Canadian and American buyers for RAW Fu RS. : 
"i a SRR dB en Anim i Ua = Se a lia Rapping at the door of an old cot “'the best animals, Canadian  stock- 
: y end in disaster, hi ler the dev- You don’t inte: to rub it in| tage, he was confronted by a shrew-!} eeders wishing to retain such prize We Fay Highest Values ; 
iia tee cae is aa to get quick, comfort- pee ies a ti ey: si curtly asked| stock for the improyement of their Write tor Price List &3 
nm, at F { oil, te him what he wanted L 
. ! % ; ; own herds, 5 : ; 
= ibly open strife ing relief “A’ve called to sce the swine,” s id) eatin) em ‘and Shipping Tags 
t Che cryi need of | la is 4 the constable. 
eae a, Te ae Once you've tried it on that stiff] ayy,» ee cH DH 0D ¢ CONSTIP TION 
as ae ght ge > speigiees Joint, sore ruscle, sciatic pain, rheu He's oot, nappily replied the! L 0 A 
/ 44 ge : sds and sectior not further ri vo} mi atic twinge, lame back, you'll find] woman, and banged the door. ' dlexainder WINNIPE Canada 
“Tale ject of this series|;.:oMuate: groups.” Out of the com-|mawarm, goothing alee aeenimorer| ss ae | ie We Aisa Buy HIDES and SENECA ROOT 
\ + is ‘ : i ‘+ et Ait bh 1 Eve ; e4 r Constipation is one of the most t 
n sacri of the Great War there ets Sh a liniment ben hy arene |Minard’s Liniment Cures Garget in! .oimon ailments of babyhood and st 
: . : ‘ sta sk eave 10 he 7 phar " RAL PPE Tire teak i 
. ald develop a broad and str ad pee ee s tc 7 ae ait ta apply: i. | sachs petra ace Wibteal ‘ ae gi te i ri Receive VES ee 
' , ( adiar {ior il irit Pat »tic rq $ / ¢ . . " ase" PG gf “ => BiG wee *1 ‘d i ou 4 a sas- 
ed ( . ; pe edp ant ‘4 : ld pis ott to give quick kg A large | The man who repairs w ine’ ee i eek thie roeble A British War Office * retura 
nadians every re r ti bottle ans economy. u moor! : suits, Fs ge a ioe <€3 
é ie f a the chanel ane ot her ry pee ies it. “Get it to |doesn’t complain of working ovyer-|nothing can equal Baby’s Own Tab- shows that war honors conferred, exe 
! 4 he ea a day. 35c, 70c, SI 40, Made in Canada | time. jlcts. They are a mild laxative which | clusive of the air force, number near- 
Class distit 5s, and)" | : ree jinstantly regulate the bowels and |yy a quarter of @ million including 
e of y tha idea Ont He aR ee STR a) ,|swecten the stomach, thus banishing he V : 576; C , 
s in a il Td Too many men who have good constipation, colic, colds, etc. ( on- |! le ictoria Cross, 57 cumasioos 
ll cl ‘ ite deas are tinable to make good. jcerning them Mrs. Eugene Vaillan-| of St. Michael and St. George, 2,092; 
1 4 "aay ice | b Vinimient: oe oi Si cunt biee as Sale jcourt, St. Mathicu, Que., writes:! Distinguished Service Order, 8,862; ; 
ui tic ’ “ , aby » in: 
i — PRR eg | To Cure a Cold in One Day | sy hs, ny: q er apd oe I Order of the British Empire, ° smnilis 
: ri o t j ak AXAT > oO C UIN-| save he r Babys Uwn Jabicts and an mR 
: } : ARR BT | Saar penis Sees cote \;|well satisfied with the result, I tary division, 3,019; Military Cross, 
It is al I probable t \ : Tt takes a hundred cents to make aj/* & A! ae te jwould strongly recommend them to 36,707, and Military Medal, 114,000, 
New Variety | ide Seca ieee A i ; and Headache and works off the Cold. 
: R y jdollar, but it takes more than a dol- W. GROVE'S signature on each all mothers for this trouble.” The easels" 
se “mM a, I want a dark 1 ast” | lar’s worth of sense to make a man.|pox. 30c. ‘ } | Tablets are sold by medicine dealers Won Fame on its Merits. — The 
‘ Mt Beri? breakfast? What do you] ge Rt ek ‘or by_ mail a 25 age! * a box from unbounded popularity that Dr Tho- 
nba PA Sead t brov an, child?” Conscience doesn’t make cowards T ungsten_ ‘From Peru ie io is etitinas cdicine Co.) mas’ Eclectric Oil enjoys is not attri- 
Ma ; ee : ee Ahk nteh+ vol fold Maty ta Lprcdberare Se The U 1s a jrockyille, Ont, butable to any elaborate advertising, 4 
] ya ynnys nig ager yd be ie literary romanccrs, i 1¢€ nitec mtates has bec et - _ ar aS }for: it has not been so advertiged, but 
d . me a li t supper, and I didn’t — - far the largest importer of tungsten A man sometimes builds better is entirely due to the merits of this 
eT it.” .? |from-Peru, taking the place previous-| than he knows, but the contractor on |‘ il as a medicine, In every city, town 
| Has a Corn Any Roots? | '" MiP ir tite isi vith iin pePeinemiab esa, chen ony, Shi *°" and hamlet in the country itis 
| } e {ly occupied by Germany, The min- a political job is reasonably sure to ought: after solely 4 date eh aa eet 
| : : : U aaa sought aus 
‘Is he a of cool , | Yes, and branches and stems as|¢ral, used for making the hardest|/ know better than he builds. good qualities. . 
“Ve H atjwell. Can it be cured? Yes, by ap-| steel, is mined by natives, washed out Aen Eee eae c Se Pre Menace ee TO 5 
he pol he Canadian’ ( of|of his automobile and let his wife de | ying Putnam's : orn eee i by hand and transported across the Women ought to make good legis-| David said that all mene are liars. 
\ alt 1 the leaders of the|the driving and never ¢ ae alfory. Insisiwon only, PURI ar iiactre {Andes on the backs of amas and} lators. Many a mag can testify that a| He might have said that some mch 
fn ue est ine "Scone ell de ale re is | burrs, ;woman’s word is law. | Work it overtime, oy 
\ { Grt Gr ve! - ~ — ——————— moi niall ea et eee etetieeerieceeealin —_ wea 
} sinIEerEEinanpingetenpnnsipeaiiineebanie snaereeeputiet waltenisenisinainhbnatitiomenansientisiain ns ogee 
Guide“ made-haste- to repudiate the}. Miller’s. Wor -owders will purge 
‘ ' dele hds fs eBan) Fag be ae Z “a6 tees Facts About Our Couting: 
} r \ 1, and/the stom: ‘ 4 itestin or | 
so effectively and so easily and pain- | 
\] y that the most delicate stomach} Has a Population Rearebid Less “+ yin SFU 
i ! T/ will not feel an nconveniene m| an ¥ nth : 
of the] th act “t Th ; I co hy aa thes | Than One Man to the ts ; fa: oN part — il 
1 to 1 rs as a preparation | Square Mile = ] 
Lat : st t! 1 igor| , : : 7 s| 
movement, wer ag 3 ae "eae ee Ht ded The area of Canada is 3,729,665 
opposed such | fy, | ‘ fect hich re square miles, Population 8,500,000, 
| sul d worms ‘ompared avith the United States, | 
m- R ic 1 greater in size than the] 
7 xr xr ] A ahuta’ hie « when irr 4 ae 
ini t N Na-} 8 5 S when! United States, including Alaska, but 
> peop! urb , t : 11 : lation less than that in the} 
f } Cre rved a truly|Minard’s Liniment Cures Distemper. lelpl ’ | 
ee tt zs fs sl ee 1j ee tie | One half of lians ec 1] 
* 1 to| is! roup, in the} Lhe J eof / for-| 
' | ly iene. 1 fis out 
V i 1 mi 4 ypulat less 
) A. a , 1 te le, 
s ss j total area of land r til-} 
i Mr. ¢ : Cig we te: IN lone ia wht ted at 302,.200.000 acres. | 
R cha : t| Heal iS Inflan 1€G 1% ostri! Is, 1918, only one-sixth of this land} 
yr a} 427 1 } 
C 4 | | Ni ia t2/,19U acres) w: und crop, | 
1 m the very accident of | Stop s Catarrha al Discharge 1} Of the 179,000,000 acres fit to farm] 
neces these things you hold , n the 454,000,000 acres mpriséd in| 
eee coed fee chs eel Cares Colds Gaiety \Iai.;tos, Seckacchnnes oa nea | 
{ other ae 18. Bee ‘nimtes ss ay 95 | 
on should guide your ac-| ~| a heed ur nd 25,-} 
i i Bourke in every way. * If|,, Byres oe hare aj eaters} 000 ) under livestock There is) 
ot, and you are animated by |) I Of Deng: AREER |room for settlers on 128,000,000 Beres 
Ae id r...| But it is curable, easily and quickly, , > 
alone, this splendid edifacc lie ¢ right method is employed. | urveyed farm lands, including 25,- 
have reared and the opportunity |, Be a: : 7 ( , a A . 
aie 1 ‘d of vou: will bea 1a iSnuffing a powder or ointment up |000,000 still open for homestead en 
that Hes snead of yOu: V € MATS I the nose won't cure Catarrh, neither | ¢; 
4 . x vi { ts, dou ng or stomacl 
"teat i omamnealeionice ice Seams EASING UP 
what I seh i ey 497 ae ae ey | fail because they only affect local] A famous woman novelist was once 
irOv coming to i ont Y | condit they do not remove the|.-; 1 1 , . ? 
1 mean not those whe have stood |eause, which is germ life established | “Xe WHY she had not marriedsl | The earth has delivered her bounty—provided for 
f anc yurde Oo ne gn 10 lin t 1 b 1 hial tt 5, and ne lave nree nings about ic nouse, i 
years, but men who stood aside|so1' passages. Ordinary remedies, do | shi ‘which sepfesent so clAaals her own. Contented, she sleeps the winter months. / 
11 he fight go on, and now when],,,; ; h ti / ia Sit lat itd ; ores 
. ; j ot nh these 10 I rts, ) haracteristics o ie average 
y see the tide is turning and rin-|Catarrhozone does, for it is breathed tl ” “na sitll me ig wi And the razn who worked with her, who toiled in her furrows and delivered ! 
re { + - ‘ © fot! eae A mat la lor vant any mor . 
ni ° want to throw their J t this 1 the inhaler into every air cell | a don't y ny more of] p=) OO Thoughts may turn to hospitality 
in wil i lave no ault 9 HANG lin t! lung , into every air passage in nim an social evenings. 
wit! He You will not find your truest /the head and throat. No matter where} “What do you mean?” her friend tad t ; 
y 1 best + iparvgle amere SUCH, BEB th r rrh_ is, Catarrhozone will | a ked ei 
I you did you wouic lave FOUNA | reach jt, It kills th zerms, heal ssun7 1 : ae ‘ 
them in the movement at the first.” | sor. ts, clears the met and shroa | he : . Pa cdesed a7 sed, ive tor 
These words of warning and advice] jncta Universally uscd; pleasant |%°t @ dog that growls all the morn- ar 
apply to more people than the far-|and clean; guaranteed to cure or | ing a parrot that swears all the i ‘*» ; 
mers, There is a tendency, in the|™Money, refunded. afternoon, and a cat that stays out ose ae Ce 
present: sane itae aad Age sais Don't be an object of aversion to| all night.” , i : ae a : 
present world unres and upheaval leyeryone you meet — get Catarrho ° a 
for people in all walks of life to break|zone today and use it regularly; il ¥ peer ee .° ee. 
away from the true and tried methods}will cure your Catarrh, Bronchitis, There are twenty-cight pounds of SAFETY RAZOE 
and leaders of the past and turn to Throat Trouble, spitting and gagging.|blood in the body of an average r . 
something new. Changed conditions Large size lasts two months, price | crown Up person, ' ~ 
a re 5 nie arya ei 1 4 00; smaller size, 50c; sample size, plays ita its part in the warm-hearted social life of the country in the meee so a it 
s wie prevaile Rp  past|25c; at all dealers, functions of the city. Winecoves a ve ie me 
are admittedly necessary. This is re- —_—_—— demanded Gillette poi yas is commission : 
cognized on all sides, but the danger How U-Boats Were Trapped Gill . } ve" 
lies in the apparent willingness of] One of the novel devices adopted Hi site the ‘elimination chron conkers ite: Sue No | figsseet 
many people to thougiitlessly seize|by the British for the co-ordination oning, ation oO © unnecessary, oe “ll ‘ | + 7 met 
oe ie oP tel ar of 90 abbagy ‘ he wens and 5 al $5. 00 at dealeve everywhere, . * 
o extremes, s r, Crerar declar-j!n¢s has just been divulged, fe yar one a 
ed in another portion of his speech, ler would drag ; submarine by a ca- MADE IN CANADA pes a | (er 
this isa time above all others for all| ble and maintain communication with : | . 
it by telephone. When the trawler : ee 
sighted a German U-Boat the British A y » 
Granulated Eyelids, submarine would slip its cable and NO Sear kn ‘ Bt = 
Your {7s ad PF sage attack the German boat before the KNOWN THE ORLD OVER. Fe. ee : 
quickly relieved by Murine | SUrpriscd German could submerge or ’ ‘ es 
Eyesi: yeRemedy, Nosinasting, |preparc 0 give fight ss age ad br flea acceptable and serviceable Christma , ee 
just Eye Confort. ° ull - for 5 
Your: , by mail 60c per Boule. eRe aE Fo & u get t » pre-war va every dollar you spend ‘on i © 
; Fo: Book ef the AY free write Many a man, like the moon, shines } a 5O0 fF me 
@urise Eye Remedy Co., Chicage. with borrowed ight, = ihe : 
F ~ j { * ete 
By 
Fs 
a4 
es P 
a ee PRY a ne _—_— ~ - menage it aa CET TREES i - Ks £8 = 


bites 
You Have Pain 
Stomach Needs ‘Aid 


Specialists who have devoted their 
lives to the treatinent of stomach ail- 
ments now tell us that many people 
who complain about their stomachs 
have no stomach ailment at all, 

You may suffer from bloating gas, 
eourness and other unpleasant symp- 


. This old-time family medicine 
wonderful corrective of all diges- 
tive and stomach disorders, 

There is no mystery about the quick 
effect you get from Dr. Hamilton’s 
Pills. They simply supply the addi- 
tional aid required by the system to 
enable it to do its work correctly. 

You'll enjoy your meals, digest 
everything you eat, look better, feel 
better, be free from headaches, con- 
stipation and indigestion, all these 
benefits come to all that use Dr. 
Hamilton's Pills. Every man or wo- 
man with a stomach ill is advised to 
spend 25¢ on a box‘of this wonderful 
vegetable remedy. 


i”. le remedy like Dr. Hamilton’s 


Filling His 
Own Shoes 


—pY- 


HENRY C. ROWLAND 


—— 


Copyrighted. Printed by special 
arrangement with Thos, Allen, 
Toronto, 


(Continued.) 


Pembroke met him upon his arrival 
and took him to his quarters, where 


how he had established his wards 
the social Attentions that they 
were already recciving. He spoke 


manner in which he had disposed of 
their demands. 

“T wrote to this Conte del Castel- 
franco,” he concluded, “and told him 
straight that there was no use in his 
asking for Rosa unless he could fur- 
nish proof that he had a million 
francs to his own credit. He hadn't 
answered the letter when I left.” 

Pembroke smiled. “Humberto 
hasn’t a sou, poor little devil,” said he. 
“IT know them slightly, and I’ve heard 
they live on a small allowance that 
the old girl has from her brother-in- 
Jaw, who manufactures Roman silks, 
_or something of the sort.” 

“Those high-soundin’ titles just 
hypnotized Miss Elliot,” Ruggles re- 
marked, “and Livingstone got 1n his 
fine work by turning on the hot air. 
He sure had plenty of it.” 

Pembroke frowned. “I’m afraid 
that Livingstone was my fault,” said 
he. “I’d known him a long time and 
always found him a good enough sért, 
so I took him over with me for tea 
one day. If I'd ever thought he was 


have done so.” 

embroke sat for a noment puffing 

his pipe, then looked at Ruggles 
with a swarthy flush under his fresh 
but weather-beaten skin. 

“T suppose Miss Elliot told you that 
¥ want to marry Roxana,” he said, a 
little stiffly. 

“Yes,” Ruggles answered, “she told 
me about that,” ° 

“Hope you've no objections to off- 
er,” said Pembroke, “I can manage 


Healthy, 
Happy Boys 
and Girls 


[* your child healthy? Is 
™ he or she up to stan- 
dard weight, of good color, 
@ with plenty of rich, red 
blood to nourish the grow- 
ing tissues? 


For children who are thin, 
pale, anaemic, under weight, 
nervous, restless, sleepless, Dr. 
Chases’ Nerve Food is of the 
greatest benefit imaginable, 

Being mild and gentle in ac- 


sion, and yet wonderfully pat- 
2 


t as a restorative, it soon 
the blood rich and builds 
ip the feeble nerves. 


0 cents &@ box, 6 for $2.75, all dealers, oF 
mn, Bates & Co, Ltd, Toronto, 


ck 
ied 


aise 
erve road 


No, of course not. I]the | £ God, don’ ” 
toms. If so your best course is tolain't ia love with | , ove of God, don’t marry her!’ 
tone up the bowels with a reliable, “Then aite fanyboty eva? Waal Pembroke started forward, staring 


they had a long talk, Ruggles describ-! 


also of the early suitors and of the} 


going to have a try, I should never | 


the million francs,” he 
laugh. 


Ruggles did not immediately ans- 
wer, Pembroke glanced at him and 
his lids narrowed, The color deepen- 
ed in his clean-cut face, 

“Pon my word you don't look any 
too pleased about it, old chap, I must 
say!” He took his pipe Rom his 
mouth and stared at Ruggles. curious- 
ly. Then, noting the gathering flush 
on Ruggles lean cheeks, his handsome 
face clouded. “Good Lord, you hav- 
en’t gone and fallen in love with her 
yourself, have you?” 

“What, me? 


gave a short could have doubted the finality of this 
decision, Ruggles’s face turned pale, 
and his expression was for the mo- 
ment almost fierce, 
“You'd really do that?” he asked. 
“Right,” said Pembroke, almost in- 
differently. “More than that, I'm go- 
ing to do it. I tell you, Ruggles, I’ve 
ot to have her, and that’s all there 
is about it.” 
Ruggles leaned forward quickly in 
his chair, 
“Then take her,” said he. “You can 
have her. I'll give her to you. There’s 
nothing to hinder. Take her and do 
anything you like with her—only, for 


broke leaned forward, gripping the 
arms of his chair, and the veins on 
his temple darkened, “Some other 
Johnny trying to cut me out?” 
Ruggles shook his head, “No,” he 
answered heavily, “it ain’t that, either. 

“Then what the devil is it? What 
are you looking so glum about? Mind 
you, though, I’m not precisely asking 
}your permission, my dear fellow. ld 
marry her anyhow, and let the dot 
slide.” 

Ruggles leaned back in his chair 
and looked thoughtfully at Pem- 
broke’s hot face. 

“Say, Lord Pembroke,” said re, “did 
you ever have any pig-keepers in your 
lage 

Pembroke’s strong jaw.fell. 
“Why—upon my soul—are you mad, 
| Ruggles ” 

“No — and you needn't get mad 
either, There’s no harm meant. I’m 
just asking for information,” 

“Pig-keepers — what the deuce do 
you mean? Swinecherds?” 

“Yes. Swincherds. You haven"t, 
(have you?” 

“Look here, Ruggles,’"—Pembroke’s 
jaw hardened and his eyes began to 
| gleam 


lief. 

“What?” he cried. “Are you mad? 
When Hamid Pasha—” i . 

“Don’t you talk Hamid Pasha to 
me!” cried Ruggles roughly. “Didn't 
I save his life and get all shot up do- 
ing it? Will I ever be a sound-man 
again? z Did I promise anything about 
these girls? I guess the score’s about 
square between Hamid Pasha and 
Richard Ruggles.’ He leaned farther 
forward, and deep lines drew them- 
selves obliquely across cither cheek. 
But the score ain’t settled between 
you and me, Lord Pembroke. What 
you said was true. You picked me out 
of the gutter and brought me out here 
with you and made a man of me. 
When I was shot to pieces you stuck 
by me day and night—and gave mie 
your own clean water when I was 
thirsty, and risked cholera drinking 
out of a stinking ditch, And atrer- 
wards—Oh, say, wliat’s the use? Do 
you think I’m going to see you throw 
your life away after all that? Not by 
a damned sight! I'd give you the 
whole bunch, first—I—I—” 

His voice broke, He burst into 
tears, turned in his chair, folded his 
arms against its back, and buried his 
face in them. Sobs shook his body 
as though to rack it apart. 

Then a strong, comforting hand 
dropped upon his heaving shoulder 
} 0 p with all of the old gentleness and 
temper and _you'll see in a minute |magnetic touch. A low, vibrant 
what I’m trying to get at. There’s|yoice, tremulous itself, said soothing- 
another question I want to ask you. |1 ’ 


ominously,—“1 don't mind a 
little chaff now and again, but if you 
ithink that just because you've come 
into a pile of money—” 
“Hold on a minute.” 
ed his hand, “Just try to keep your 


| 
| Ruggles rais- 
| 
’ 


Now I’ve heard you speak of your] “There—there—my boy —~ there — 
mother, and I know you think a heap|there! I’m sorry.” 


of here How would you like it if 
{people were to point at her and say: 
‘See that woman? Well, her father 
tended hogs out in the beech woods, 
and so did her brothers and sisters. 
}She might have been doing that now, 
herself, but she was mighty good- 
\looking, and her folks thought they 
| might get more out of her some other 
way, so they sold her—’” 

He got no further. Pembroke had 
bounded from his his face crim- 
son, and his powerful grip fell on 


(To Be Continued.) 


The Bonds of Empire 


Loyalty to the British Empire, 
Which Great Britain Is 

Only One Part ~~ ‘ 

Never before has there been a part- 


of 


in 
one political system, yet with a sin- 
|Ruggle’s throat. But even as his gle oe nee Parone Hg which, :eact 
lerasp tightened, he began vaguely to]8ives allegiance. In this the Prince 
{understand. The tense fingers relaxed |was fortunate in the moment of his 
He thrust Ruggles from him and sank |visit. The principle of equality of na- 
pee ie it The color faded |tionhood within the British E:mpise 
OVeudarenad little cad!" he grow- | Was slowly attaining recognition be- 
led. “You little shoe-shop bounder|fore the war—superseding that other 
that I picked out of fa gutter!” — |conception of the Empire as a “Mo- 
wi Tea Ret, see ker Counted 4 number 9 
was, And you're Lord Pembroke. |@aughter states. The war revealed it 
as the bdnd which holds the empire 

together—a bond so tangible that it 


{And if you do-what you say you went 

to do and marry Roxana, then people 
seems negligible to forcign observers, 
yet potent as no other bond could be. 


can say about your children’s mother 
We have said often 


what you were ready to choke me 
|for just sort of asking how you'd feel 
| sin » armistice? whether the prin- 
{ciple of Dominion equality with Great 


‘if they was to say it about yours 
See? Only in the case of your child- 
ren it would be true. The grandfather 
7 . ; » 7 a , il ] . . m é 
nas rein ray peep rons. wot pd Britain is yet thoroughly understood 
ithere across the Black Sea,” And he here. The Prince yesterday warned 
jerked his head toward the east. {Great Britain against failure to un- 
Pembroke’s face was set and rigid: |derstat d it. “The people in the Old 
| He swallowed once or twice, but did] ¢, ry must understand that the pa 
{not try to speak, Ruggles went on]... es 4 F : 
las quietly as though he had not just |tousm of the Dominions is national 
narrowly escaped a strangling:— patriotism, and not mere loyalty 


nership of great nations, united 
chair, 


doubt, as we 


to 


“Say, Lord Pembroke, you know]Great Britain. It is loyalty to thei: 
ast as well as I do, that people a, British institutions; it is loyalty to 
jhigh up in society as you are cant] . warlike eae ae 1 ie 
lalways do what they like, It would the world-wide British system of life 
Inot be a square deal—not only tojand government; and it is, above all, 


those of their family that are living, | loyalty 
but to those that might come after 
ithem. I never looked at it that way 


to the British Empire, of 
Great Britain, like the Domin- 
jions, is only one part.” 


j which 


No more sim- 


juntil I met you and Mr, Falconer and| | 
}Hamid Pasha and some others that | ple yet complete definition of the 
lwere the real thing. But there’s nojtie which effectually unites the em- 


getting around it, I guess. And then |pire has been uttered in public.—From 
there’s another thing—this girl Rox- 


lana’s only about half-civilized, T’ve | the London Times, 

"lwatched her and I know. For all of ree 

her wonderful looks, she’s regular | Greater Production Needed 
she-devil inside, and it only needs a 


jolt to bring it out.. What sort of 
la wife would she be for you? Be- 
I Hieve me, l’d rather marry a lioness 
land live in the cage with her, There’s 
something in her eyes that scares me, 
sometimes-— and you know yourself 
ithat J don’t scare so awful easy.” 
Pembroke, who had been-watching 
him fixedly, leaned forward and bur- 


Probably Take Two Years For Bread- 
stuffs to Meet World’s 
Requirements 

Montreal.—Addressing members of 
the board of trade here, Dr, J. W. 
Robertson, C.M.G., former fuel con- 
troller for Canada, dealt exhaustively 


lied his face in his hands. Z th the eubled ti p 
anal’ he “muttered, "You've with t subject of marketing and 
Beles it, Ruggles. It’s just that has | other conditions of interest in Can- 
driven me nearly mad, She’s a great,jada, he said that it would probably 
isplendid, tawny loness—but damp It, take two years for the production 
jiman, she's more than that! She’s of breadstuffs to meet the world’s 
got mind, She’s got a soul, I know 


requirements and leave over a moder- 
ate reserve a8 a security against scare- 
ity the following year, 

He stated that on all wheat bought 
by Great Britain in Canada from the 
crops in 1918 and 1919 there was an 
average loss to the United Kingdom 
of probably over seventy-five cents 
a bushel. 

One of the primary causes of the 
high-cost of living, he said, was that 
there are not enough of the necessary 
commodities to go around and be- 
cause of the fear that there will not 
be enough to meet the actual needs. 
The remedy was to produce and save. 

At least the toes of a man 
waits are sure to turn up, 


her better than you think, I’ve talk- 
ed to her. I've studied her, There’s 
a lot of the savage underneath, I'll 
admit, but who wants one of these 
puling ‘born-in-captivity’ women? I 
can tame her. I’m none so civilized 
j myself, and I’ve always told myself 
| 


that if ever I came to mate it- would 
be with some such woman as that.” 
He drew out his handkerchief and 
wiped his glistening forehead, “There 
Ihave been no end of sultans whose 
| mothers were taken from the same 
ielass,” he growled. “Hamid Pasha 
himself was very probably the son of 
a slave. All ‘Lurks take their wives in 
that way.” : 

“Yes,” answered Ruggles quietly, 
“and look at them now.” 

Pembroke’s jaw set stubbornly, and 
when he spoke, there was something 
in his voice that struck a chill through 
Ruggles. 

“Oh, well,” said he harshly. “No 
doubt you're right, Il chuck my 


who 


title, change my name, marry the girl, 

and clear out for America or Africa VY gw eee a 
or some other place. ‘Nuff said. I've our Exes inhames iY 

got to have her, and that’s jolly well y relieved by Murine 


all there is about it,” 
Nobody, to hear and see the inan, 


Eyes 


eee | You ~ ys oy mast he per “4 
‘es Me th Fay Eye Remedy Co. Chicage. 


at Ruggles in amazement and disbe- 


Orders Received From Seed Houses 
In England and Ireland 


| Crosland Brothers, growers of 
sweet pea seeds for half a dozen of 
‘ | . Py 
}the leading seed houses of England 
Royal Yeast jand Irelan@, have their ground at 


has been the 
standard yeast 


in Canada for - 
over 50 years, and it 


Dunean, British Columbia, in shap 
for sowing which will begin at one 
Contracts have been ed, 
seed for growing have been sent 
by the British firms of the very ney 


receis atid 


out 


is a well known fact jest and most rare varicti The 
thet bread made Crosland’s will put in six acres of this 
s%ed and have sublet contracts to se ys 


with Royal Yeast 
Possesses a greater 
amount of nourish- 
ment than that 
made with any 


en of eight local growers, 
put in about four acres mor 
| quality of the Vancouver Island seed 


ay 


who will 
! 
I 


so good that an unlimited number 
} 


of contracts could be received 


| Ponsible growers, 
j nn 
|B. C. Berry Growers Expect Big Y¢ar 
| British’ Columbia berry growers are 
} anticipating a good season during 1920 | 
See SS ae —==!both in production and financial re 
Gen. Currie asa Soldier jturns, The growers of the Gordon 
ensseniii jHead district are reported to ha 
Pen Sketch of Canadian Chief in War) ede contracts to deliver to the ja 
Correspondent’s Book : | fac tories 250 tons of strawberrics at 
Phillip Gibbs, the noted war corres- jor, Soe a pound. Bu if aes 
pondent, in a book entitled “Realities omg through the lower Mainland and 
of the War,” just published, describes |v Eee ee Island oatabet Cah) 
General Currie, officer commanding abe yas and poawatie offers ropene oe 
the Canadian army in Flanders dur- large producers for the co 
ing the great war, as follows: harvest. 
“He cut clean to the heart of | Ee ada 
things ruthlessly, like a surgeon, and, sad Out of Season 
as I watched that man, immense in _ Waiter: What was your order 
bulk, with heavy, thoughtful face, I’m sorry to ak I have forgotten 
stern eyes that softened a little when | Diner: I gave ayia long ago I don’t 
he smiled, I thought of him as Oliver |" member, but I'll change it, fo 
Cromwell. This real estate agent, as |“ auld be ou Ch een 
he was before he took to soldiering, |” Boston Tr a 
is undoubtedly a man of strong abil- Pent ie 
ity, free from those trammels of red} 
tape and tradition which swathed | 
around so many of our own leaders.” |+ 
| 
Meter New Ship After Buffalo Bill lwfinard’s Liniment Co., Limited 
A big freighter now being built for}” yyaye used MINARD’S . LINI 
the United States shipping board will} MENT for Croup; found nothing 
be named the William F. Cody, in|equal to it; sure cure. | 
honor of “Buffalo Bill,” the last of | 1 CHAS. E. SHAR P 
the great scouts and plainsmen in the Hawkshaw, N.B., Sept. Ist, 1905 
United States. j oan 
Some things go without saying, 
but a woman’s tongue isn’t in that 
class, j PTS te ota ae, 
A lion in a jungle will jump 25 
eo —————— | or 30 feet from a standing start 


!Minard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff. 


The pore-cleansing, purifying and 


sterilizing properti s of this wo -dor- The Alberta government has clos 
ful skin soap, using plenty of hot} |ed a contract for the tion at Cal- 
water and soap, best applied wit! oa eeiafovuereoonciata cone 
the hands, will prove holpful to those mary OF & TEMsOICERECORCE Ser 
who use it for the first time, ‘Touch house aud office building for the tele 
eruptions, roughness or irritation, phone department. The cost will be 
if any, with Cuticura Ointment bo-{ | e«7 YY : . 
hi 67,000, The building ll have tw 
fore bathing. Dry and dust lightly iyi Os building wi ‘ ii ay é 
with Cuticura’Talcum, a fascinating storeys and basement, and is being 
fragrance for powdering and per- built st g enough to carry a third 
fuming the skin. Nothing bvtter store) 5 
than these ideal skin purifiers and : 
their cost is but little, ; 1 i eS 
€ ce ¢ muusybody is a pers 

Cuticura Soap 25c., Ointment 25 and 50c., Yes, ; ‘gabe we Pie site 
Talcum 26c. plus Canadian duties, Sold who a lot of valuable time 
everywhere, For sample e. ch free ad- Ti 3 } 
dress; “Cuticura,Dept. N, Boston,U.S.A.” pointing out the duties of others. 


Mrs. Etta Dorion, of Ogdensburg, Wis., says: 


“T suffered from female troubles which caused ploncing pains 
like a knife through my back and side. I finally lost all my 
strength so I had to go to bed, ‘The doctor advised an operation 
but I would not listen toit. I thought of what I had read about 


Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and tried it. The first 
bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me, 
All women who have fem trouble of any kind should try 
Lydia E. Pinkham’s VegetaBle Compound,” 


How Mrs. Boyd Avoided an Operation. 


Canton, Ohio.—*‘I suffered from a female trouble which 
caused me much suffering, and two doctors decided that 
I would have to go through an operation before I could 

et well, ‘ 
oN My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pink- 
ham’s Vegetable Compound, advised me to try it be- 
fore submitting to an operation, It relieved me from 
my troubles so [ can do my housyarork without any 
difficulty. I advise any woman who js afflicted with 
female froubles to give Lydia I. Pinkbam’s Vege. 
table Compound a trial and it will do as much 
for them.”—Mrs. Maki Bory, 1421 oth Bb. 
N. E., Canton, Ohio, 


Every Sick Woman Sho 


Before Subinitting To An 


@ 
IC Canada’s Place in the Empire 
Canada is the foremost of the fam 
ily of the British Empire, and, being 
nearest, the great responsibility rests, 
upon her, not alone to aid and succor 
in battle, but to lead the van in all 
forms of industrial life ; to seize every 
opportunity to forward the grandeur 
- : and stability of both herself and the 
OINTMENT & TALCUM) \*""" Ss" Sess 


New Telephone Building for Calgary ; 


| Proof that Some Women 
do Avoid Operations za 


ry 


LYDIA E. PINKH 
VEGETABLE COMPOUND? 


LYDIA £.PINKHAM MEDICINE €O, LYNN. MASS, ‘| 


NURSES 
ADVISE 


| Zam-Buk, because they have proved 
that {t does what is claimed for it. 

Mies E. L. Doxey, graduate nurse 
of 3220 Michigan Ave, Chicago, 
eays: “I have a patient who suf 
fered terribly with piles. Zam-Buk 
ig the only remedy that gave her 
relief. 

“I have used Zam-Buk myself 
for the sanie allment, also for sores 
and burns, and have the greatest 
confidence in it,” 


jam Bulk 


. ” 
i 
: : 
| -CALOMEL! 
H . 
i eugene é 
t ' 
, : + 
j It's Mercury! Quick- } 
iF f : 
if silver! Shocks the H 
\4 é 
\f Liver—Danger! } 
i You're lious, but car i 
You have a throbbing sensation in 
your head, a bad taste 1 n h, 
your eyes burn, your ell 
with dark rings under yo 
lips are parched, your é cor 
Istipated. No wonder you fee] 
|mean. and ill-tempered. You need 
n yntin ‘ 
an your elf and 
ithose who love you, and don’t ort 
jto harsh physics that irritate and it 
, |jure. Remember t! st d dex 
}of the stomach, 1 d be are 
tjended by morning with gentle, h ry 
_jless Cascarets—they work while yo 
isleep, never ripe, shock, sick« or in 
jconveniencs They're grand! 


Alberta Bred Calf Wins Prize 


A heifer calf owned by Chas. G. 
| Beeching, of De Winton, Alberta, h 
won fourth prize in a class of seventy 
lat a show in Cl 
| word received from that city Phe 
lcalf was bred in Alberta, and is said 
jto be one of the finest of jits class. 
lIn this competition it stood higher 
ithan the calf that won the. first prize 
lat the International Livestock Shc 
Hast December Che animal 


jterwards sold for $2,000 


| Largest Airplane Motors 
| 


Italian automobile engineers hav 


{built the world’s largest < mo 
jtor, a twelve-cylinder  affai of 720 
j horse-power, 

7 


KNOCKS OUT PAIN 


Comforting relief from 
makes Sloan’s. the 
World’s Liniment 


pain 


heumatic 
s, painful 
nd mos 
humanit¢ 
ales bee 
t@ 


|} This famous re 
aches soreness, 
ains, neuralgic 
ternal twinges t 
rs from, enjoys its grez 
it practically 
ing speedy, comforting 
Always ready for use, it 
jto penetrate without rubbir 
duce results Clean, refre 
jall drug stores, 35c, 70c, $1.40. 
lin ( 


stiffine 


pair 


never fails 
lief, 
es little 
and pro 
At 
Made« 


hing. 


inada. 


| 


Liniment 


Heep it handy’ 


— 


ip 
7 i 


ae 


|e H 


a | 


AM 


Operation(// 


«infirm 


RT Treen eT * GPR 


Bow island Kevicw, Bow Island, Alberta, Match 12th. 1920. 


We offer Special Sale Prices every day in the week 


Many of Our Prices are lower than the present 
Whole-sale Price. 


When re stocking your cellar with the things | And passing up a better grade, although 


you need | You'r sure it leads in worth and quality 
To give bodily strength and clear thought ; : a 
for the fray, | In spite of dull times and strong competition 


Remember, in Value and Service we lead, |Our customers stick to us, like bark to the 


Regardless of what an odd person may say, |, ie et 
The reason for which isan easy computition 


Our prices are lower than others can be. 


“FOR SERVICE” 
_try THE HOME GRAIN. CO. 


Choice Feed Oats. 

Lethbridge Best Chinook Lump and Stove Coal. 
High Power Gasoline, New Stock Kerosene 
Also Complete Lines of 
Automobile, Tractor and Threshers Oils and Greases. 


“for Genuine Service ” 
See R. J. PRINGLE 


Even though your purse is flat and lean, 


Demand that the goods you buy are fresh 
8 y y and nice Here's to the old customer and also the new 


And thenbe sure that they are good andclean | Who realize the good values we gave in 


For allinferior goods are dear at any price. he the past, 
, . Our appreciation of your trade is sincere 
HOME GRAIN CO. False economy is buying something that you and true, 


know | And we assure ‘you the same yalue and 
service will last. 


BOW ISLAND. }/f Is not as good as it should really be, 


We are open for your Spring Orders and offer special inducements for 
you to trade at Burdett's busy store. 


BURDETT MERCANTILE Co. 


A. H. RYGG, Prop. 


W. 0. LYONS 
THE “IDEAL” REPAIR STORE. BURDETT 


Shoe Repairing with Best Leather and Workmanship 
Agent. for Medicine Hat Laundry, Dying and Cleaning 
Now is the time to bring in your Harness Repairs 


Or Hides to sell 
see me before 


Cash Paid for Hides and Furs 


Our Policy 


Covers all Fire Losses. selling 


You are Protected from Loss by the Strongest 
Fire Insurance Companies on the American Continent, 
when you Insure with me. 


any 
SPECIALS ‘1 
ROBERT H. ROBERTON, Bow ISLAND for the Lent Season 


If you have 
Fat Hogs cy ; 
or Fat Cattle “Qe 
THIS WEEK 
Lesser Slave Lake Whitefish, fresh Halibut 
and a full line of Salt and Cured Fish 
Also Fresh and Cured Meats 
Fresh Bread Daily 


ANNOUNCEMENT. 


We have appointed A. E. Browning 
our Agent for Bow Island, 
Your Patronage solicited, 

Medicine Hat Steam Laundry Ltd. 


Dry Cleaners and Dyers. 


HONE No. 9. 


THE BURDETT CASH MEAT MARKET. 
GEORGE LOMAS, propRIETOR. 


GLOBE STORES 
BOW ISLAND. WINNIFRED 


SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY 


I Want You to Know 


That [ have for Sale, about 2U sets of High Grade 
Harness, some of which I made and some I bought 


last year. If I priced this Harness at todays price Sugar Corn,.......... .,.20¢e. ean | Swift's White Laundry Soap 
yeu would pay from 5 to 20 dollars more per set. if Tomatoes See an. _20¢. can 9 cakes for...........500. 
This Harness is superior to Harness being made this year, Karly June Peas... ................20e/ can | Ontario Cream Cheese _ per Ib............ B5¢ 
it is all linen thread stitched. Onions 5 Ibs. for-, ......,..25c. Macaroni 2 pkgs. ete 25e. 
Wagstaffe’s Pure Jam Pearline large size,,..........80c. 
[f yon are interested you will have to act quickly. Raspberry or Black Currant 4lb. can $1.10 | Domestic Sardines 3 tims for,.........,.25¢ 


We are also offering used Army Saddles and Bridles 
at $20 00 for complete outfit 


FOR STERLING VALUES AND RELIABLE COODS 


TRADE AT THE 


GLOBE STORES 


Now is the time to bring in Your Harness for 
- Oiling and Repaurs. 


W. J. Oliver 


MAIN STREET, BOW ISLAND. 


These are not Saturday Specials 
They are a few of OUR REGULAR PRICES 


Compare them with those you have been paying 
Then Give Us A Trial Order 


2 pkgs for... 25c | Pilehards 


ROTICR 10 CREDITORS The Unadvertised 
AND OLAIMANTS 
In the Betate of DONALD McUoll ___ Product 


late of peay the Town of Bow Island Tam your worst enemy 
iv the Province of Alberta, farmer|1 am the ruler of retail reverses 


a Tam the Lord High Potenate 
pergons having claims upon the Estate of Failure. . 
uf the ebeve ‘aamed DONALD Mo. I am the reasin of that 


COLL, who died on the léth. day of | Downward Slant on your Profit 
April 1919, are required tw file with|eurye, 


NOVICE is hereby given that all 


Cornflakes Kelloy’s 2 tins for 


re Was recA gote “i a, s Tam the cause of the Silent Puffed Wheat per pkg......... l5c.| Finonan Haddie  —_ tb, tin........, 30¢. 
pril, ment, duly}. = Pepe - > 

verified, of their claims and of m8 Sickness that Stills your Cash Donalco Molasses Sib. tins ey 80c. Lennox soap 2 bars for,...., .15e. 
seeurities held by them, and that|reyister bell Ginger Bread Molasses lb, tins... 55c. | Toilet soap 4 bars for... 25e, 
anand egy Pomrng H0 I am the origon of Dissatis-|} Gongs Soups per pkg......... 5c. | Quaker Oats §=—S— per pkg......... 


“ : the parties entitled | fied Customers and the Loss of || Royal Shield Baking Powder 12 oz tin 25c. | Soda Biscuits 
thereto, having regard only to the| Trade Dr. Prices Baking Powder 12 oz. tin 55¢ | Mixed Cookies 
cleluas of which potice has been so 4 
filed ep Wile hove beso brought to I am the leaven of ancertainty 
its kpewledge in the midst of certain profits. 
Dated this 19th. day of February, 
19@0 
THE TRUSTS ANDGUARANTEH| HAY? You any News Items 


See Our Window for SATURDAY SPECIALS 


COMPANY, LIMITED, you would like to have printed B AT F M A N B ROS 
Public Adininistrator, in the Review? Anyone wishing . 
Calgary, Alberta, Canada 


to put any News Items in the 

. Review, just post them to the 
Mutter Wrappers with your own| Editor with their name and 

tame printed on cau be had at the address. 

Bow Lead Review Review Office, Bow leland 


Approved **J.A, Jackson” J,D.0, 


The Store that Saves You MONEY 


MAIN STREET, BOW ISLAND 


tbc, 


Fertile Plains, 


From our own Correspondentigy 
a 


Glenn Henry for mely of Bow Yeland 
and son of ©.F, Henry died of Pn 
mon'a on the 228th. of meebo 
Kansas City, the remains were in- 
terved there. 

The U.F.W.A, of Fertile Plains 
gave a box social on Friday evening 
the 27th. of the month, the sum of $25 
was realized, 


The school is progressing uncer . 
able direction of Mrs. J.W. O'Neal ber 
term will expire the last of the month 
Miss. McDanials has been tendered 
the school for the last quarter of the 
vear, 


Grandma Henry was feeling very 
poorly a few daye ago and the doctor 
was called, she bas been feeling 
much better since, 


tt 


WHITLA 


From our own Correspondent 


Mrs. W. Fuller who has for the past 

winter been living in Saskatchewan 
returned to Whitla on Tuesday's noon 
train to stay for a short time, Mrs. 
Foller ie staying with her parents Mr 
and Mrs. Richardson. 


eeepc 
Mrs. RK. Emerson who recently 
underwent an operation in tae Medic 


ine Hat hospital returned to her home 


on Tuesday very much improved, 
Mrs. John Walker of the oJ 
country was tuken to the Medicine 


Hat hospital on Monday evening fou 
an operation the trouble being 
| appendicitis. 
| pS SEA, Fae ae CS 

The sad news of the deathof Forest 
Huthaway (familiary knewn as 
“Chuck” veached Whitla yesterday 
the deceased was a victim of the flu 


} 


The entire family of Mrs. Haat 
Harden eight it all ave down with 
the fiu; several embers of the family 
being so illthata doctor wae called 


}trom Medicine Hat. 
a 


The debate that was tw have been 
heldin the Farmers Hall on Saturday 
afternoon was postponed till some 
later date, card playing occupied the 
afternoon, as many people had > o 
ered to hear the debate 

Eanes Css eee 

Mr R, Babe and daughter Isabelle 

inade u pleasure Lip to Medicine Hat 


on Thursday evening. 
| 


Miss. Flovence Freeman who has 
been attending the high school at 
Medicine Hat has returned home to 


| visit her parents for a short time. 
' 


Miss, Bernice Neilly and Blanche 
Olson have returned to Calgary to 
pursue their studies at the Normal 
school, 


Mr. and Mis. Nesbitt and their 
daughters arrived on Thursday's noon 
train to spend the summer with M1 
and Mrs. Atchison, 

————- —o——_—- 
Services were pot beld in the Piv- 
testant Church last Sunday, owing to 
the iliness of many of the members, 


“Mr. W. W. Smith whe went ts 
Chicago with a car of his fat cattle 
returned to his home after spending 
a very pleasant winter visiting East- 
er) points. 
ee 

Mr, Ralph Gechter who has been 
spending the winter in the Pine 
Woods of British Columbia returned 
to his home in Whit'a on Monday. 


The dunee Chat was to be held last 
Friday evening was postponed owing 
to the flu 
se A) 
Mr, and Mrs, Leinhart entertained 
Mr. Fowle: aud mother at dinner on 
Sunday 


ieee 


fg